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- #21
coco25
Deeply Rooted
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- May 13, 2016
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Thank You, they too are still a work in progress, as is pretty much everything it seems haha...Like very much! Those are perfect coops!
Thank You, they too are still a work in progress, as is pretty much everything it seems haha...Like very much! Those are perfect coops!
Thank you, okay, thanks for the tip. I was seriously surprised that they were still producing.Your garden is looking good! I had 3 year old bell peppers and they produced nice peppers. Your's probably needs some help, compost it and mulch it. Cute chicken coops!
Yeah it turned out to be the perfect thing instead of building a new coop & just having those two empty houses, I saved a good deal of money....& who doesn't LOVE that hahahaWell that was a great way to repurpose them! I notice a chair in the pen. Do you sit with them?
I used to have a chair in my chicken pen and I would sit and visit with the girls, and the very friendly ones would hop up on my lap. I can't believe I had the time to do that. Must have been before I got a laptop.
I am in zone 9a....way south Louisiana. I didn't do anything to over winter any of the plants, they just didn't die, we only got one day last winter that it got to 34 so I never covered anything & this spring they all just started producing again! Just luck & this southern weather I suppose!How do you over winter bell peppers? What growing zone are you in? Your garden is WAY ahead of mine and just beautiful (sigh).
Also, just a thought about your garden, if you have heard this before, sorry. You mentioned that both tomatoes and squash grow beautiful plants but don't produce as much as you expected. I always heard that this is because of to much nitrogen and not enough potassium. Nitrogen feeds leaf production, but potassium supports blooming and fruit production. Maybe you need to tweak what/how you are feeding them. Just a thought, I don't know if it will help.